📦 Modern encryption for Ruby and Rails
- Works with database fields, files, and strings
- Maximizes compatibility with existing code and libraries
- Makes migrating existing data and key rotation easy
- Has zero dependencies and many integrations
Learn the principles behind it, how to secure emails with Devise, and how to secure sensitive data in Rails.
Add this line to your application’s Gemfile:
gem "lockbox"Generate a key
Lockbox.generate_keyStore the key with your other secrets. This is typically Rails credentials or an environment variable (dotenv is great for this). Be sure to use different keys in development and production.
Set the following environment variable with your key (you can use this one in development)
LOCKBOX_MASTER_KEY=0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000or add it to your credentials for each environment (rails credentials:edit --environment <env>)
lockbox:
master_key: "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000"or create config/initializers/lockbox.rb with something like
Lockbox.master_key = Rails.application.credentials.lockbox[:master_key]Then follow the instructions below for the data you want to encrypt.
Create a migration with:
class AddEmailCiphertextToUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.1]
def change
add_column :users, :email_ciphertext, :text
end
endAdd to your model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email
endYou can use email just like any other attribute.
User.create!(email: "[email protected]")If you need to query encrypted fields, check out Blind Index.
You can specify multiple fields in single line.
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, :phone, :city
endFields are strings by default. Specify the type of a field with:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :birthday, type: :date
has_encrypted :signed_at, type: :datetime
has_encrypted :opens_at, type: :time
has_encrypted :active, type: :boolean
has_encrypted :salary, type: :integer
has_encrypted :latitude, type: :float
has_encrypted :longitude, type: :decimal
has_encrypted :video, type: :binary
has_encrypted :properties, type: :json
has_encrypted :settings, type: :hash
has_encrypted :messages, type: :array
has_encrypted :ip, type: :inet
endNote: Use a text column for the ciphertext in migrations, regardless of the type
Lockbox automatically works with serialized fields for maximum compatibility with existing code and libraries.
class User < ApplicationRecord
serialize :properties, JSON
store :settings, accessors: [:color, :homepage]
attribute :configuration, CustomType.new
has_encrypted :properties, :settings, :configuration
endFor Active Record Store, encrypt the column rather than individual accessors.
For StoreModel, use:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :configuration, type: Configuration.to_type
after_initialize do
self.configuration ||= {}
end
endValidations work as expected with the exception of uniqueness. Uniqueness validations require a blind index.
You can use encrypted attributes in fixtures with:
test_user:
email_ciphertext: <%= User.generate_email_ciphertext("secret").inspect %>Be sure to include the inspect at the end or it won’t be encoded properly in YAML.
Lockbox makes it easy to encrypt an existing column without downtime.
Add a new column for the ciphertext, then add to your model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, migrating: true
endBackfill the data in the Rails console:
Lockbox.migrate(User)Then update the model to the desired state:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email
# remove this line after dropping email column
self.ignored_columns += ["email"]
endFinally, drop the unencrypted column.
If adding blind indexes, mark them as migrating during this process as well.
class User < ApplicationRecord
blind_index :email, migrating: true
endIf tracking changes to model attributes, be sure to remove or redact encrypted attributes.
PaperTrail
class User < ApplicationRecord
# for an encrypted history (still tracks ciphertext changes)
has_paper_trail skip: [:email]
# for no history (add blind indexes as well)
has_paper_trail skip: [:email, :email_ciphertext]
endAudited
class User < ApplicationRecord
# for an encrypted history (still tracks ciphertext changes)
audited except: [:email]
# for no history (add blind indexes as well)
audited except: [:email, :email_ciphertext]
endTo decrypt data outside the model, use:
User.decrypt_email_ciphertext(user.email_ciphertext)Note: Action Text uses direct uploads for files, which cannot be encrypted with application-level encryption like Lockbox. This only encrypts the database field.
Create a migration with:
class AddBodyCiphertextToRichTexts < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.1]
def change
add_column :action_text_rich_texts, :body_ciphertext, :text
end
endCreate config/initializers/lockbox.rb with:
Lockbox.encrypts_action_text_body(migrating: true)Migrate existing data:
Lockbox.migrate(ActionText::RichText)Update the initializer:
Lockbox.encrypts_action_text_bodyAnd drop the unencrypted column.
You can pass any Lockbox options to the encrypts_action_text_body method.
Add to your model:
class User
field :email_ciphertext, type: String
has_encrypted :email
endYou can use email just like any other attribute.
User.create!(email: "[email protected]")If you need to query encrypted fields, check out Blind Index.
You can migrate existing data similarly to Active Record.
Add to your model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_one_attached :license
encrypts_attached :license
endWorks with multiple attachments as well.
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_many_attached :documents
encrypts_attached :documents
endThere are a few limitations to be aware of:
- Variants and previews aren’t supported when encrypted
- Metadata like image width and height aren’t extracted when encrypted
- Direct uploads can’t be encrypted with application-level encryption like Lockbox, but can use server-side encryption
To serve encrypted files, use a controller action.
def license
user = User.find(params[:id])
send_data user.license.download, type: user.license.content_type
endUse filename to specify a filename or disposition: "inline" to show inline.
Lockbox makes it easy to encrypt existing files without downtime.
Add to your model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
encrypts_attached :license, migrating: true
endMigrate existing files:
Lockbox.migrate(User)Then update the model to the desired state:
class User < ApplicationRecord
encrypts_attached :license
endAdd to your uploader:
class LicenseUploader < CarrierWave::Uploader::Base
encrypt
endEncryption is applied to all versions after processing.
You can mount the uploader as normal. With Active Record, this involves creating a migration:
class AddLicenseToUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.1]
def change
add_column :users, :license, :string
end
endAnd updating the model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
mount_uploader :license, LicenseUploader
endTo serve encrypted files, use a controller action.
def license
user = User.find(params[:id])
send_data user.license.read, type: user.license.content_type
endUse filename to specify a filename or disposition: "inline" to show inline.
Encrypt existing files without downtime. Create a new encrypted uploader:
class LicenseV2Uploader < CarrierWave::Uploader::Base
encrypt key: Lockbox.attribute_key(table: "users", attribute: "license")
endAdd a new column for the uploader, then add to your model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
mount_uploader :license_v2, LicenseV2Uploader
before_save :migrate_license, if: :license_changed?
def migrate_license
self.license_v2 = license
end
endMigrate existing files:
User.find_each do |user|
if user.license? && !user.license_v2?
user.migrate_license
user.save!
end
endThen update the model to the desired state:
class User < ApplicationRecord
mount_uploader :license, LicenseV2Uploader, mount_on: :license_v2
endFinally, delete the unencrypted files and drop the column for the original uploader. You can also remove the key option from the uploader.
Include the attachment as normal:
class User < ApplicationRecord
include LicenseUploader::Attachment(:license)
endAnd encrypt in a controller (or background job, etc) with:
license = params.require(:user).fetch(:license)
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: Lockbox.attribute_key(table: "users", attribute: "license"))
user.license = lockbox.encrypt_io(license)To serve encrypted files, use a controller action.
def license
user = User.find(params[:id])
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: Lockbox.attribute_key(table: "users", attribute: "license"))
send_data lockbox.decrypt(user.license.read), type: user.license.mime_type
endUse filename to specify a filename or disposition: "inline" to show inline.
Generate a key
key = Lockbox.generate_keyCreate a lockbox
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: key)Encrypt files before passing them to Shrine
LicenseUploader.upload(lockbox.encrypt_io(file), :store)And decrypt them after reading
lockbox.decrypt(uploaded_file.read)Generate a key
key = Lockbox.generate_keyCreate a lockbox
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: key)Encrypt
ciphertext = lockbox.encrypt(File.binread("file.txt"))Decrypt
lockbox.decrypt(ciphertext)Generate a key
key = Lockbox.generate_keyCreate a lockbox
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: key, encode: true)Encrypt
ciphertext = lockbox.encrypt("hello")Decrypt
lockbox.decrypt(ciphertext)Use decrypt_str get the value as UTF-8
To make key rotation easy, you can pass previous versions of keys that can decrypt.
Create config/initializers/lockbox.rb with:
Lockbox.default_options[:previous_versions] = [{master_key: previous_key}]To rotate existing Active Record & Mongoid records, use:
Lockbox.rotate(User, attributes: [:email])To rotate existing Action Text records, use:
Lockbox.rotate(ActionText::RichText, attributes: [:body])To rotate existing Active Storage files, use:
User.with_attached_license.find_each do |user|
user.license.rotate_encryption!
endTo rotate existing CarrierWave files, use:
User.find_each do |user|
user.license.rotate_encryption!
# or for multiple files
user.licenses.map(&:rotate_encryption!)
endOnce everything is rotated, you can remove previous_versions from the initializer.
You can also pass previous versions to individual fields and files.
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, previous_versions: [{master_key: previous_key}]
endTo rotate local files and strings, use:
Lockbox.new(key: key, previous_versions: [{key: previous_key}])It’s a good idea to track user and employee access to sensitive data. Lockbox provides a convenient way to do this with Active Record, but you can use a similar pattern to write audits to any location.
rails generate lockbox:audits
rails db:migrateThen create an audit wherever a user can view data:
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def show
@user = User.find(params[:id])
LockboxAudit.create!(
subject: @user,
viewer: current_user,
data: ["name", "email"],
context: "#{controller_name}##{action_name}",
ip: request.remote_ip
)
end
endQuery audits with:
LockboxAudit.last(100)Note: This approach is not intended to be used in the event of a breach or insider attack, as it’s trivial for someone with access to your infrastructure to bypass.
This is the default algorithm. It’s:
- well-studied
- NIST recommended
- an IETF standard
- fast thanks to a dedicated instruction set
Lockbox uses 256-bit keys.
For users who do a lot of encryptions: You should rotate an individual key after 2 billion encryptions to minimize the chance of a nonce collision, which will expose the authentication key. Each database field and file uploader use a different key (derived from the master key) to extend this window.
You can also use XSalsa20, which uses an extended nonce so you don’t have to worry about nonce collisions. First, install Libsodium. It comes preinstalled on Heroku. For Homebrew, use:
brew install libsodiumAnd for Ubuntu, use:
sudo apt-get install libsodium23Then add to your Gemfile:
gem "rbnacl"And add to your model:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, algorithm: "xsalsa20"
endMake it the default with:
Lockbox.default_options[:algorithm] = "xsalsa20"You can also pass an algorithm to previous_versions for key rotation.
Hybrid cryptography allows servers to encrypt data without being able to decrypt it.
Follow the instructions above for installing Libsodium and including rbnacl in your Gemfile.
Generate a key pair with:
Lockbox.generate_key_pairStore the keys with your other secrets. Then use:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, algorithm: "hybrid", encryption_key: encryption_key, decryption_key: decryption_key
endMake sure decryption_key is nil on servers that shouldn’t decrypt.
This uses X25519 for key exchange and XSalsa20 for encryption.
Lockbox supports a few different ways to set keys for database fields and files.
- Master key
- Per field/uploader
- Per record
By default, the master key is used to generate unique keys for each field/uploader. This technique comes from CipherSweet. The table name and column/uploader name are both used in this process.
You can get an individual key with:
Lockbox.attribute_key(table: "users", attribute: "email_ciphertext")To rename a table with encrypted columns/uploaders, use:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key_table: "original_table"
endTo rename an encrypted column itself, use:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key_attribute: "original_column"
endTo set a key for an individual field/uploader, use a string:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key: ENV["USER_EMAIL_ENCRYPTION_KEY"]
endOr a proc:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key: -> { code }
endTo use a different key for each record, use a symbol:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key: :some_method
endOr a proc:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key: -> { some_method }
endYou can use a key management service to manage your keys with KMS Encrypted.
For Active Record and Mongoid, use:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, key: :kms_key
endFor Action Text, use:
ActiveSupport.on_load(:action_text_rich_text) do
ActionText::RichText.has_kms_key
end
Lockbox.encrypts_action_text_body(key: :kms_key)For Active Storage, use:
class User < ApplicationRecord
encrypts_attached :license, key: :kms_key
endFor CarrierWave, use:
class LicenseUploader < CarrierWave::Uploader::Base
encrypt key: -> { model.kms_key }
endNote: KMS Encrypted’s key rotation does not know to rotate encrypted files, so avoid calling record.rotate_kms_key! on models with file uploads for now.
While encryption hides the content of a message, an attacker can still get the length of the message (since the length of the ciphertext is the length of the message plus a constant number of bytes).
Let’s say you want to encrypt the status of a candidate’s background check. Valid statuses are clear, consider, and fail. Even with the data encrypted, it’s trivial to map the ciphertext to a status.
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: key)
lockbox.encrypt("fail").bytesize # 32
lockbox.encrypt("clear").bytesize # 33
lockbox.encrypt("consider").bytesize # 36Add padding to conceal the exact length of messages.
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: key, padding: true)
lockbox.encrypt("fail").bytesize # 44
lockbox.encrypt("clear").bytesize # 44
lockbox.encrypt("consider").bytesize # 44The block size for padding is 16 bytes by default. Lockbox uses ISO/IEC 7816-4 padding, which uses at least one byte, so if we have a status larger than 15 bytes, it will have a different length than the others.
box.encrypt("length15status!").bytesize # 44
box.encrypt("length16status!!").bytesize # 60Change the block size with:
Lockbox.new(padding: 32) # bytesYou can pass extra context during encryption to make sure encrypted data isn’t moved to a different context.
lockbox = Lockbox.new(key: key)
ciphertext = lockbox.encrypt(message, associated_data: "somecontext")Without the same context, decryption will fail.
lockbox.decrypt(ciphertext, associated_data: "somecontext") # success
lockbox.decrypt(ciphertext, associated_data: "othercontext") # failsYou can also use it with database fields and files.
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, associated_data: -> { code }
endYou can use binary columns for the ciphertext instead of text columns.
class AddEmailCiphertextToUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.1]
def change
add_column :users, :email_ciphertext, :binary
end
endDisable Base64 encoding to save space.
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :email, encode: false
endor set it globally:
Lockbox.encode_attributes = falseIt’s easy to read encrypted data in another language if needed.
For AES-GCM, the format is:
- nonce (IV) - 12 bytes
- ciphertext - variable length
- authentication tag - 16 bytes
Here are some examples.
For XSalsa20, use the appropriate Libsodium library.
Lockbox makes it easy to migrate from another library without downtime. The example below uses attr_encrypted but the same approach should work for any library.
Let’s suppose your model looks like this:
class User < ApplicationRecord
attr_encrypted :name, key: key
attr_encrypted :email, key: key
endCreate a migration with:
class MigrateToLockbox < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.1]
def change
add_column :users, :name_ciphertext, :text
add_column :users, :email_ciphertext, :text
end
endAnd add has_encrypted to your model with the migrating option:
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :name, :email, migrating: true
endThen run:
Lockbox.migrate(User)Once all records are migrated, remove the migrating option and the previous model code (the attr_encrypted methods in this example).
class User < ApplicationRecord
has_encrypted :name, :email
endThen remove the previous gem from your Gemfile and drop its columns.
class RemovePreviousEncryptedColumns < ActiveRecord::Migration[8.1]
def change
remove_column :users, :encrypted_name, :text
remove_column :users, :encrypted_name_iv, :text
remove_column :users, :encrypted_email, :text
remove_column :users, :encrypted_email_iv, :text
end
endView the changelog
Everyone is encouraged to help improve this project. Here are a few ways you can help:
- Report bugs
- Fix bugs and submit pull requests
- Write, clarify, or fix documentation
- Suggest or add new features
To get started with development, install Libsodium and run:
git clone https://github.com/ankane/lockbox.git
cd lockbox
bundle install
bundle exec rake testFor security issues, send an email to the address on this page.